Shows how a colorful cast of scientists is using their expanding knowledge of the brain and its evolution to make machines sense and think like human beings. National ad/promo.
Page 290: "We have instinctively for centuries maintained that there was this nonphysical thing, which we certainly could neither explain nor even identify, that did the thinking, had the thoughts, contained our psychology, was our personality. We've pushed deep enough into the brain, now, so that it really looks like maybe this mental thing doesn't exist. Our mind really is just a phenomenon of all that wet stuff. . . . from an objective, scientific point of view one can only conclude that neurons are all there is."
"In the Image of the Brain" is an engaging, non-technical introduction to connectionist based approaches to artificial intelligence - mainly concerning multilayer perceptrons and Hopfield networks. Though the information presented is somewhat dated at this point in time, this book offers an interesting historical narrative that can't be found in more technical introductory texts.